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f000001,10.800,13.520,"In the mean time already at the end of March the order to begin on the new dike had arrived from the dikemaster general."
f000002,13.520,37.560,"Hauke first called the dike overseers together, and in the inn up by the church they had all appeared one day and listened while he read to them the main points from the documents that had been drawn up so far: points from his petition from the report of the dikemaster general, and lastly the final order in which, above all, the outline which he had proposed was accepted, so that the new dike should not be steep like the old ones, but slant gradually toward the sea."
f000003,37.560,43.040,"But they did not listen with cheerful or even satisfied faces."
f000004,43.040,57.280,"Well, yes, said an old dike overseer, here we have the whole business now, and protests won't do any good, because the dikemaster general patronises our dikemaster."
f000005,57.280,68.640,"You're right, Detlev Wiens, added a second; our spring work is waiting, and now a dike miles long is to be made? then everything will have to be left undone."
f000006,68.640,75.440,"You can finish all that this year, said Hauke; things don't move as fast as that."
f000007,75.440,78.240,"Few wanted to admit that."
f000008,78.240,87.400,"But your profile, said a third, bringing up something new; the dike will be as broad on the outside toward the water as other things are long."
f000009,87.400,89.360,"Where shall we get the material?"
f000010,89.360,91.880,"When shall the work be done?"
f000011,91.880,98.160,"If not this year, then next year; that will depend chiefly on ourselves, said Hauke."
f000012,98.160,101.520,"Angry laughter passed along the whole company."
f000013,101.520,104.160,"But what is all that useless labor for?"
f000014,104.160,112.920,"The dike isn't supposed to be any bigger than the old one; cried a new voice; and I'm sure that's stood for over thirty years."
f000015,112.920,129.480,"You are right, said Hauke, thirty years ago the old dike broke; then backwards thirtyfive years ago, and again fortyfive years ago; but since then, although it is still standing steep and senseless, the highest floods have spared us."
f000016,129.480,155.360,"But the new dike is to stand in spite of such floods for hundreds of years; for it will not be broken through; because the gentle slope toward the sea gives the waves no point of attack, and so you will gain safe land for yourselves and your children, and that is why the government and the dikemaster general support meand, besides, that is what you ought to be aware of for your own profit."
f000017,155.360,163.720,"When the assembled were not ready on the spot to answer these words, an old whitehaired man rose with difficulty from his chair."
f000018,163.720,173.200,"It was Elke's godfather, Jewe Manners, who, in response to Hauke's beseeching, had kept his office as dike overseer."
f000019,173.200,189.240,"Dikemaster Hauke Haien, he said, you give us much commotion and expense, and I wish you had waited with all this until the Lord had called me to rest; butyou are right, and only unreason can deny that."
f000020,189.240,210.960,"We ought to thank God every day that He has kept us our precious piece of foreland against storms and the force of the tide, in spite of our idleness; now, I believe, is the eleventh hour, in which we must lend a hand and try to save it for ourselves to the best of our knowledge and powers, and not defy God's patience any longer."
f000021,210.960,221.120,"I, my friends, am an old man; I have seen dikes built and broken; but the dike that Hauke Haien has proposed according to his Godgiven insight and has carried through with the governmentthat dike none of you living men will see broken."
f000022,221.120,225.000,"And if you don't want to thank him yourselves, your grandchildren some day will not deny him his laurel wreath."
f000023,225.000,230.200,"Jewe Manners sat down again; he took his blue handkerchief from his pocket and wiped a few drops from his forehead."
f000024,230.200,238.200,"The old man was still known as a man of efficiency and irreproachable integrity, and as the assembly was not inclined to agree with him, it remained silent."
f000025,238.200,240.920,"But Hauke Haien took the floor, though all saw that he had grown pale."
f000026,240.920,245.000,"I thank you, Jewe Manners, he said, for staying here and for what you have said."
f000027,245.000,253.760,"You other gentlemen, have the goodness at least to consider the building of the new dike, which indeed will be my burden, as something that cannot be helped any more, and let us decide accordingly what needs to be done."
f000028,253.760,255.600,"Speak! said one of the overseers."
f000029,255.600,257.640,"And Hauke spread the map of the new dike out on the table."
f000030,257.640,262.080,"A while ago someone has asked, he began, from where we shall get the soil?"
f000031,262.080,273.320,"You see, as far as the foreland stretches out into the flooded district, a strip of land is left free outside of the dike line; from this we can take our soil and from the foreland which runs north and south along the dike from the new enclosed land."
f000032,273.320,277.560,"If we have a good layer of clay at the water side, at the inside and the middle we can take sand."
f000033,277.560,280.040,"Now first we have to get a surveyor to mark off the line of the new dike on the foreland."
f000034,280.040,284.080,"The one who helped me work out my plan will be best suited for the work."
f000035,284.080,291.120,"Furthermore we have to order some onehorse tipcarts at a cartwright's for the purpose of getting our clay and other material."
f000036,291.120,302.040,"For damming the channel and also for the inside, where we may have to use sand, we shall needI cannot tell now how many cartloads of straw for the dike, perhaps more than can be spared in the marshes."
f000037,302.040,305.360,"Let us discuss then now how all this is to be acquired and arranged."
f000038,305.360,309.800,"The new lock here, too, on the west side toward the water will have to be given over to an efficient carpenter later for repairs."
f000039,309.800,319.560,"The assembly gathered round the table, looked at the map with half attention and gradually began to talk; but it seemed as if they did it merely so that there might be some talking."
f000040,319.560,327.800,"When it came to the choice of a surveyor, one of the younger ones remarked: You have thought it out, dikemaster; you must know best yourself who is fit for it."
f000041,327.800,334.600,"But Hauke replied: As you are sworn men, you have to speak your own opinion, Jacob Meyen; and if you think of something better, I'll let my proposal fall."
f000042,334.600,337.360,"Oh, I guess it'll be all right, said Jacob Meyen."
f000043,337.360,342.040,"But one of the older ones did not think that it would be so perfectly all right."
f000044,342.040,348.280,"He had a nephew, a surveyor, the like of whom had never been in the marshes, who was said to surpass the dikemaster's father, the late Tede Haien."
f000045,348.280,354.280,"So there was a discussion about the two surveyors and it was finally decided to let both do the work together."
f000046,354.280,361.440,"There was similar disputing over the carts, the furnishing of the straw and everything else, and Hauke came home late and almost exhausted on his brown horse which he was still riding at that time."
f000047,361.440,370.520,"But when he sat in the old armchair, handed down from his selfimportant but more easygoing predecessor, his wife was quickly at his side: You look tired, Hauke, she said, and with her slender hand pushed his hair out of his forehead."
f000048,370.520,371.880,"A little, I suppose, he replied."
f000049,371.880,372.560,"And is it getting on?"
f000050,372.560,378.400,"It'll get on; he said with a bitter smile; but I myself have to push the wheels and have to be glad if they aren't kept back."
f000051,378.400,378.840,"But not by all?"
f000052,378.840,381.160,"No, Elke; your godfather, Jewe Manners, is a good man; I wish he were thirty years younger."
f000053,381.160,392.680,"When after a few weeks the dike line had been marked off and most of the carts had been furnished, the dikemaster had gathered together in the inn by the church all the shareholders of the land to be diked in and also the owners of the land behind the old dike."
f000054,392.680,406.160,"He wanted to present to them a plan for the distribution of the work and the cost and to hear their possible objections; for the owners of the old land had to bear their part of the labor and the cost because the new dike and the new sluices would lessen the running expenses of the older ones."
f000055,406.160,417.040,"This plan had been a hard piece of work for Hauke and if he had not been given a dike messenger and a dike clerk through the mediation of the dikemaster general, he could not have accomplished it so soon, although again he was working well into the night."
f000056,417.040,425.120,"When he went to bed, tired to death, his wife no longer waited for him with feigned sleep; she, too, had such a full share of daily work that she lay, as if at the bottom of a deep well, in a sleep that could not be disturbed."
f000057,425.120,431.120,"Now Hauke read his plan and again spread his papers out on the tablepapers which, to be sure, had already lain for three days in the inn for inspection."
f000058,431.120,437.840,"Some serious men were present, who regarded this conscientious diligence with awe, and who, after quiet consideration, submitted to the low charge of the dikemaster."
f000059,437.840,451.200,"But others, whose shares in the new land had been sold either by themselves or their fathers or someone else who had bought them, complained because they had to pay part of the expenses of the new dikedin land which no longer concerned them, not thinking that through the new work the old lands would be less costly to keep up."
f000060,451.200,463.640,"Again there were others who were blessed with shares for the new land who clamoured that one should buy these of them for very little, because they wanted to be rid of shares that burdened them with such unreasonable labor."
f000061,463.640,467.080,"Ole Peters who was leaning against the doorpost with a grim face, shouted into the midst: Think first and then trust in our dikemaster!"
f000062,467.080,478.160,"He knows how to calculate; he already had most of the shares, then he was clever enough to get mine at a bargain, and when he had them, he decided to dike in the new land."
f000063,478.160,480.400,"After these words for a moment a deadly silence fell upon the assembly."
f000064,480.400,493.440,"The dikemaster stood by the table where he had spread out his papers before; he raised his head and looked over to Ole Peters: You know very well, Ole Peters, he said, that you are libeling me; you are doing it just the same, because you know that, nevertheless, a good part of the dirt you are throwing at me will cling to me."
f000065,493.440,497.120,"The truth is that you wanted to be rid of your shares, and that at that time I needed them for my sheep raising."
f000066,497.120,504.680,"And if you want to know more I will tell you that the dirty words which escaped your lips here at the inn, namely that I was made dikemaster only on account of my wifethat they have stirred me up and I wanted to show you all that I could be dikemaster on my own account."
f000067,504.680,506.960,"And so, Ole Peters, I have done what the dikemaster before me ought to have done."
f000068,506.960,513.520,"If you are angry, though, because at that time your shares were made mineyou hear now, there are enough who want to sell theirs cheaply, because the work connected with them is too much."
f000069,513.520,518.880,"There was applause from a small part of the assembled men, and old Jewe Manners, who stood among them, cried aloud: Bravo, Hauke Haien!"
f000070,518.880,519.520,"The Lord will let your work succeed!"
f000071,519.520,524.120,"But they did not finish after all, although Ole Peters was silent, and the people did not disperse till supper time."
f000072,524.120,533.200,"Not until they had a second meeting was everything settled, and then only after Hauke had agreed to furnish four teams in the next month instead of the three that were his share."
f000073,533.200,544.760,"At last, when the Whitsuntide bells were ringing through the land, the work had begun: unceasingly the dumpcarts were driven from the foreland to the dike line, there to dump the clay, and in the same way an equal number was driven back to get new clay from the foreland."
f000074,544.760,549.400,"At the line of the dike itself men stood with shovels and spades in order to put the dumped clay into its right place and to smooth it."
f000075,549.400,550.640,"Huge loads of straw were driven up and taken down."
f000076,550.640,563.200,"This straw was not only used to cover the lighter material, like sand and loose earth, which was used for the inside; gradually single pieces of the dike were finished, and the sod with which they were covered was in places securely overlaid with straw as a protection against the gnawing waves."
f000077,563.200,570.760,"Inspectors engaged for the purpose walked back and forth, and when it was stormy, they stood with wide open mouths and shouted their orders through wind and storm."
f000078,570.760,583.960,"In and out among them rode the dikemaster on his white horse, which he now used exclusively, and the animal flew back and forth with its rider, while he gave his orders quickly and drily, praised the workmen, or, as it happened sometimes, dismissed a lazy or clumsy man without mercy."
f000079,583.960,590.320,"That can't be helped! he would cry; we can't have the dike spoiled on account of your laziness!"
f000080,590.320,595.880,"From far, when he came up from the enclosed land below, they heard the snorting of his horse, and all hands went to work more briskly."
f000081,595.880,596.520,"Come on, get to work!"
f000082,596.520,597.320,"There's the rider on the white horse!"
f000083,597.320,609.000,"During breakfast time, when the workmen sat together in masses on the ground, with their morning bread, Hauke rode along the deserted works, and his eyes were sharp to spy where slovenly hands had used the spade."
f000084,609.000,616.080,"Then when he rode up to the men and explained to them how the work ought to be done, they would look up at him and keep on chewing their bread patiently; but he never heard a word of assent or even any remark."
f000085,616.080,630.080,"Once at this time of day, though rather late, when he had found the work on a part of the dike particularly well done, he rode to the nearest assembly of breakfasting men, jumped down from his white horse and asked cheerfully who had done such a neat day's work."
f000086,630.080,635.200,"But they only looked at him shyly and sombrely and only slowly, as if against their will, a few names were given."
f000087,635.200,643.960,"The man to whom he had given his horse, which stood as meekly as a lamb, held it with both hands and looked as if he were frightened at the animal's beautiful eyes fixed, as usual, upon its master."
f000088,643.960,648.000,"Well, Marten, Hauke called to him; why do you stand there as if you had been thunderstruck?"
f000089,648.000,650.160,"Sir, your horse is so calm, as if it were planning something bad!"
f000090,650.160,654.440,"Hauke laughed and took the horse by the reins himself, when immediately it rubbed its head caressingly against his shoulder."
f000091,654.440,667.320,"Some of the workmen looked shyly at horse and rider, others ate their morning meal silently, as if all this were no concern of theirs, and now and then threw a crumb to the gulls who had remembered this feeding place and with their slender wings almost descended on the heads of the men."
f000092,667.320,676.280,"For a while the dikemaster gazed absently at the begging birds as they chased with their bills the bits thrown at them; then he leaped to his saddle and rode away, without turning round to look at the men."
f000093,676.280,680.160,"Some of the words that now were being spoken among them sounded to him like derision."
f000094,680.160,682.560,"What can that mean? he spoke to himself."
f000095,682.560,684.440,"Was Elke right when she said that all were against me?"
f000096,684.440,689.160,"These laborers and poorer people, too, many of whom will be well off through my new dike?"
f000097,689.160,692.960,"He spurred on his horse, which flew down into the enclosed land as if it were mad."
f000098,692.960,709.400,"To be sure, he himself knew nothing of the uncanny glamour with which the rider of the white horse had been clothed by his former servant boy; but now the people should have seen him, with his eyes staring out of his haggard face, his coat fluttering on his fiery white horse."
f000099,709.400,721.760,"Thus summer and autumn had passed and until toward the end of November the work had been continued; then frost and snow had put a stop to the labors and it was decided to leave the land that was to be diked in, open."
f000100,721.760,724.440,"Eight feet the dike rose above the level of the land."
f000101,724.440,731.520,"Only where the lock was to be made on the west side toward the water, a gap had been left; the channel up in front of the old dike had not yet been touched."
f000102,731.520,737.160,"So the flood could make its way into the enclosed land without doing it or the new dike either any great damage."
f000103,737.160,743.880,"And this work of human hands was entrusted to the great God and put under His protection until the spring sun should make possible its completion."
f000104,743.880,750.320,"In the mean time a happy event had been expected in the house of the dikemaster: in the ninth year of his marriage a child had been born."
f000105,750.320,760.080,"It was red and shrivelled and weighed seven pounds, as newborn children should when they belong, as this one did, to the female sex; only its crying was strangely muffled and did not please the wise woman."
f000106,760.080,767.120,"The worst of all was that on the third day Elke was seized with high childbed fever, was delirious and recognised neither her husband nor her old helper."
f000107,767.120,771.800,"The unbounded joy that had come over Hauke at the sight of his child had turned to sorrow."
f000108,771.800,777.240,"The doctor from the city was called, he sat at her bedside and felt her pulse and looked about helplessly."
f000109,777.240,781.920,"Hauke shook his head: He won't help; only God can help!"
f000110,781.920,786.640,"He had thought out a Christianity of his own, but there was something that kept back his prayer."
f000111,786.640,797.360,"When the old doctor had driven away, Hauke stood by the window, staring out into the wintry day, and while the patient was screaming in her delirium, he folded his handshe did not know whether he did so in devotion or so as not to lose himself in his terrible fear."
f000112,797.360,797.440,"The sea!"
f000113,797.440,798.640,"The sea! wailed the patient."
f000114,798.640,801.320,"Hold me! she screamed; hold me, Hauke!"
f000115,801.320,805.960,"Then her voice sank; it sounded, as if she were crying: Out on the sea, on the wide sea."
f000116,805.960,808.560,"Oh, God, I'll never see him again!"
f000117,808.560,816.360,"Then he turned round and pushed the nurse from the bed; he fell on his knees, clasped his wife and drew her to his heart: Elke, Elke, don't you know me?"
f000118,816.360,816.880,"I am with you!"
f000119,816.880,821.760,"But she only opened wide her eyes glowing with fever and looked about, as if hopelessly lost."
f000120,821.760,828.640,"He laid her back on her pillows; then he pressed his hands together convulsively: Lord, my God, he cried; don't take her from me!"
f000121,828.640,830.600,"Thou knowest, I cannot live without her!"
f000122,830.600,840.280,"Then it seemed as if a thought came to him, and he added in a lower voice: I know well Thou canst not always do as Thou wouldstnot even Thou; Thou art allwise; Thou must act according: to Thy wisdom."
f000123,840.280,841.560,"Oh Lord, speak to me through a breath!"
f000124,841.560,842.600,"It seemed as if there were a sudden calm."
f000125,842.600,850.480,"He only heard low breathing; when he turned to the bed, he saw his wife lying in a quiet sleep and the nurse looking at him with horrified eyes."
f000126,850.480,851.640,"He heard the door move."
f000127,851.640,853.160,"Who was that? he asked."
f000128,853.160,857.800,"Sir, the maid Ann Grethe went out; she had brought in the warmingpan."
f000129,857.800,861.280,"Why do you look at me so in such confusion, Madame Levke?"
f000130,861.280,867.000,"I was frightened by your prayer; with that you can't pray death away from anybody!"
f000131,867.000,874.160,"Hauke looked at her with his penetrating eyes: Do you, too, like our Ann Grethe, go to the conventicle at the Dutch tailor Jantje's?"
f000132,874.160,875.000,"Yes, sir; we both have the living faith!"
f000133,875.000,875.920,"Hauke made no reply."
f000134,875.920,880.880,"The practise of holding seceding conventicles, which at that time was in full swing, had also blossomed out among the Frisians."
f000135,880.880,891.560,"Downandout artisans and schoolmasters dismissed as drunkards played the leading parts, and girls, young and old women, lazy and lonely people went eagerly to the secret meetings at which anybody could play the priest."
f000136,891.560,896.480,"Of the dikemaster's household Ann Grethe and the servant boy in love with her spent their free evenings there."
f000137,896.480,907.880,"To be sure, Elke had not concealed her doubtful opinion of this from Hauke, but he had said that in matters of faith one ought not to interfere with anyone: this could not hurt anybody, and it was better to have them go there than to the inn for whiskey."
f000138,907.880,909.880,"So he had let it be, and so he had kept silent even now."
f000139,909.880,913.840,"But, to be sure, people were not silent about him; the words of his prayer were spread from house to house."
f000140,913.840,917.840,"He had denied the omnipotence of God; what was a God without omnipotence?"
f000141,917.840,921.400,"He was a denier of God; that affair with the devil's horse may have something in it after all!"
f000142,921.400,928.800,"Hauke heard nothing of all this; his ears and eyes were open only for his wife in these days, even his child did not exist for him any more."
f000143,928.800,936.040,"The old doctor came again, came every day, sometimes twice, then stayed a whole night, again wrote a prescription and Iven Johns swiftly rode with it to the apothecary."
f000144,936.040,943.560,"But finally the doctor's face grew more cheerful, and he nodded confidentially to the dikemaster: She'll pull through."
f000145,943.560,945.160,"She'll pull through, with God's help!"
f000146,945.160,965.120,"And one daywhether it was because his skill had conquered her illness or because in answer to Hauke's prayer God had been able after all to find a way out of his troublewhen the doctor was alone with the patient, he spoke to her, while his old eyes smiled: Lady, now I can safely say to you: today the doctor has his galaday; things looked very darkly for you, but now you belong to us again, to the living!"
f000147,965.120,976.120,"Then a flood of light streamed out of her dark eyes; Hauke, Hauke, where are you? she cried, and when, in response to her loud cry, he rushed into the room and to her bed, she flung her arms round his neck: Hauke, my husbandsaved!"
f000148,976.120,977.160,"I can stay with you!"
f000149,977.160,985.720,"Then the old doctor pulled his silk handkerchief out of his pocket, wiped his forehead and cheeks with it and nodding left the room."
f000150,985.720,1010.400,"On the third evening after this day a pious speakerit was a slippermaker who had once been dismissed by the dikemasterspoke at the conventicle held at the Dutch tailor's, where he explained to his audience the attributes of God: But he who denies the omnipotence of God, who says: 'I know Thou canst not as Thou wouldst'we all know the unhappy man; he weighs like a stone on the communityhe has fallen off from God and seeks the enemy of God, the friend of sin, as his comforter; for the hand of man has to lean upon some staff."
f000151,1010.400,1013.320,"But youbeware of him who prays thus; his prayer is a curse!"
f000152,1013.320,1014.680,"This too was spread from house to house."
f000153,1014.680,1016.880,"What is not spread in a small community?"
f000154,1016.880,1018.800,"And it reached Hauke's ears."
f000155,1018.800,1027.120,"He said no word about it, not even to his wife; but sometimes he would embrace her violently and draw her to himself: Stay faithful, Elke!"
f000156,1027.120,1028.080,"Stay faithful to me!"
f000157,1028.080,1031.360,"Then her eyes would look up at him full of wonder."
f000158,1031.360,1032.200,"Faithful to you?"
f000159,1032.200,1033.400,"To whom else should I be faithful?"
f000160,1033.400,1036.960,"After a short while, however, she had understood his words."
f000161,1036.960,1041.200,"Yes, Hauke, we are faithful to each other; not only because we need each other."
f000162,1041.200,1043.840,"Then each went his and her way to work."
f000163,1043.840,1045.280,"So far all would have been well."
f000164,1045.280,1052.920,"But in spite of all the lively work, a loneliness had spread round him, and in his heart nestled a stubbornness and a reserved manner toward other people."
f000165,1052.920,1061.760,"Only toward his wife he was always the same, and every evening and every morning he knelt at the cradle of his child as if there he could find the place of his eternal salvation."
f000166,1061.760,1080.840,"Toward servants and workmen, however, he grew more severe; the clumsy and careless ones whom he used to instruct with quiet reproaches were now startled by his harsh address, and sometimes Elke had to make things right quietly where he had offended."
f000167,1080.840,1083.440,"When spring came, work on the dike began again."
f000168,1083.440,1091.320,"The gap in the western dike line was closed by a temporary dike halfmoon shaped on the inside and the same toward the outside, for the protection of the new lock about to be made."
f000169,1091.320,1096.160,"And as the lock grew, so the chief dike gradually acquired its height, which could be more and more quickly attained."
f000170,1096.160,1101.560,"The work of directing was not any easier for the dikemaster, as in place of Jewe Manners, Ole Peters had stepped in as dike overseer."
f000171,1101.560,1116.960,"Hauke had not cared to attempt preventing this, but now in place of the encouraging word and the corresponding friendly slap on the shoulder that he had earned from his wife's old godfather, he had to cope with the successor's secret hostility and unnecessary objections which had to be thwarted with equally unnecessary reasons."
f000172,1116.960,1123.000,"For Ole belonged to the important people, to be sure, but not to the clever ones in dike matters; besides, the scribbling hired man of former days was still in his way."
f000173,1123.000,1133.040,"The brightest sky again spread over sea and marshes, and the enclosed land was once more gay with strong cattle, the bellowing of which from time to time interrupted the widespread calm."
f000174,1133.040,1136.040,"Larks sang continually high in the air, but one was not aware of it until for the time of a heartbeat the singing had ceased."
f000175,1136.040,1146.400,"No bad weather disturbed the work, and the lock was ready with its unpainted structure of beams before it needed the protection of the temporary dike for even one night; the Lord seemed to favor the new work."
f000176,1146.400,1149.360,"Then Elke's eyes would laugh to greet her husband when he came home from the dike on his white horse."
f000177,1149.360,1154.160,"You did turn into a good animal! he said, and then patted the horse's smooth neck."
f000178,1154.160,1162.760,"But when he saw the child clinging round her neck, Hauke leaped down and let the tiny thing dance in his arms."
f000179,1162.760,1168.480,"Then, when the white horse would fix its brown eyes on the child, he would say: Come here, you shall have the honor."
f000180,1168.480,1174.560,"And he would place little Wienkefor that was her Christian nameon the saddle and lead the white horse round in a circle on the hill."
f000181,1174.560,1181.320,"The old ash tree, too, sometimes had the honor; he would set the child on a swinging bough and let it rock."
f000182,1181.320,1182.760,"The mother stood in the house door with laughing eyes."
f000183,1182.760,1196.720,"But the child did not laugh; her eyes, between which there was a delicate little nose, looked a little dully into the void, and her little hands did not try to seize the small stick that her father was holding for her to take."
f000184,1196.720,1205.640,"Hauke did not pay attention to this, especially as he knew nothing about such little children."
f000185,1205.640,1216.440,"Only Elke, when she saw the brighteyed girl on the arm of her charwoman, who had been confined at the same time with her, sometimes said with regret: Mine isn't as far on as yours yet, Trina."
f000186,1216.440,1226.640,"And the woman, as she shook the chubby boy she held by the hand with brusque love, would cry: Yes, madam, children are different; this one here, he stole apples out of my room before he was more than two years old."
f000187,1226.640,1232.160,"And Elke pushed the chubby boy's curls from his eyes, and then secretly pressed her quiet child to her heart."
f000188,1232.160,1238.680,"At the beginning of October, the new lock stood solidly at the west side in the main dike, now closed on both sides."
f000189,1238.680,1247.000,"Except for the gaps by the channel, the new dike now sloped all the way round with a gentle profile toward the water and rose above the ordinary high tide by fifteen feet."
f000190,1247.000,1250.320,"From the northwestern corner one, could look unhindered past Jevers Island out over the sea."
f000191,1250.320,1256.880,"But, to be sure, the winds blew more sharply here; one's hair fluttered, and he who wanted a view from this point had to have his cap securely on his head."
f000192,1256.880,1268.760,"Toward the end of November, when storm and rain had set in, there remained only one gap to close, the one hard by the old dike, at the bottom of which the sea water shot through the channel into the new enclosure."
f000193,1268.760,1270.840,"At both sides stood the walls of the dike; now the cleft between them had to vanish."
f000194,1270.840,1275.160,"Dry summer weather would have made the work easier; but it had to be done anyway, for a rising storm might endanger the whole work."
f000195,1275.160,1276.880,"And Hauke staked everything on accomplishing the end."
f000196,1276.880,1288.160,"Rain poured down, the wind whistled; but his lean figure on the fiery white horse rose now here, now there out of the black masses of people who were busy by the gap, above and below, on the north side of the dike."
f000197,1288.160,1299.120,"Now he was seen below beside the dumpcarts that already had to go far on the foreland to get the clay; a crowded lot of these had just reached the channel in order to cast off their loads."
f000198,1299.120,1305.640,"Through the splashing of the rain and the roaring of the wind, from time to time sounded the sharp orders of the dikemaster, who wanted to rule here alone today."
f000199,1305.640,1313.680,"He called the carts according to their numbers and ordered back those that were crowding up."
f000200,1313.680,1315.960,"When his Stop sounded, then all work ceased."
f000201,1315.960,1316.280,"Straw!"
f000202,1316.280,1323.600,"Send down a load of straw! he called to those above, and the straw from one of their loads came tumbling down on to the wet clay."
f000203,1323.600,1330.360,"Below men jumped about in it and tore it apart and called up to the others that they did not want to be buried."
f000204,1330.360,1337.160,"Again new carts came, and Hauke was up on top once more, and looked down from his white horse into the cleft below and watched them shovel and dump their loads."
f000205,1337.160,1338.080,"Then he glanced out over the sea."
f000206,1338.080,1342.960,"The wind was sharp and he saw how the edge of the water was climbing higher up the dike and that the waves rose still higher."
f000207,1342.960,1353.240,"He saw, too, that the men were drenched and could scarcely breathe during their hard work because of the wind which cut off the air right before their mouths and because of the cold rain that was pouring down on them."
f000208,1353.240,1353.760,"Hold out, men!"
f000209,1353.760,1355.400,"Hold out! he shouted down to them."
f000210,1355.400,1357.560,"Only one foot higher; then it'll be enough for this flood."
f000211,1357.560,1369.640,"And through all the raging of the storm one could hear the noise of the workmen; the splashing of the masses of clay tumbling down, the rattling of the carts and the rustling of the straw let down from above went on unceasingly."
f000212,1369.640,1379.960,"In the midst of these noises, now and then, the wailing of a little yellow dog could be heard, which, shivering and forlorn, was knocked about among all the men and teams."
f000213,1379.960,1382.480,"Suddenly a scream of anguish from the little animal rose out of the cleft."
f000214,1382.480,1386.200,"Hauke looked down: he had seen the dog hurled down from above."
f000215,1386.200,1388.440,"His face suddenly flushed with rage."
f000216,1388.440,1388.760,"Stop!"
f000217,1388.760,1393.280,"Stop! he shouted down to the carts; for the wet clay was being heaped up unceasingly."
f000218,1393.280,1397.840,"Why? a rough voice bawled up from below, not on account of the wretched brat of a dog?"
f000219,1397.840,1398.640,"Stop, I say!"
f000220,1398.640,1401.080,"Hauke shouted again; bring me the dog!"
f000221,1401.080,1402.960,"I don't want any crime done with our work."
f000222,1402.960,1409.840,"But not a hand stirred; only a few spades full of tough clay were still thrown beside the howling animal."
f000223,1409.840,1416.160,"Then he spurred his white horse so that it uttered a cry and stormed down the dike, and all gave way before him."
f000224,1416.160,1419.200,"The dog! he shouted, I want the dog!"
f000225,1419.200,1426.520,"A hand slapped his shoulder gently, as if it were the hand of old Jewe Manners, but when Hauke looked round, he saw that it was only a friend of the old man's."
f000226,1426.520,1429.520,"Take care, dikemaster! he whispered to him."
f000227,1429.520,1433.560,"You have no friends among these people; let this dog business be!"
f000228,1433.560,1438.680,"The wind whistled, the rain splashed, the men had stuck their spades into the ground, some had thrown them away."
f000229,1438.680,1440.280,"Hauke bent down to the old man."
f000230,1440.280,1451.880,"Do you want to hold my horse, Harke Jens? he asked; and the latter scarcely had the reins in his hand when Hauke had leaped into the cleft and held the little wailing animal in his arms."
f000231,1451.880,1457.520,"Almost in the same moment he sat high in his saddle again and galloped back to the dike."
f000232,1457.520,1459.800,"He glanced swiftly over the men who stood by the teams."
f000233,1459.800,1460.560,"Who was it? he called."
f000234,1460.560,1461.400,"Who threw down this creature?"
f000235,1461.400,1467.680,"For a moment all was silent, for rage was flashing from the face of the dikemaster, and they had a superstitious fear of him."
f000236,1467.680,1471.840,"Then a muscular fellow stepped down from a team and stood before him."
f000237,1471.840,1485.360,"I didn't do it, dikemaster, he said, bit off a piece from his roll of tobacco, and calmly pushed it into his mouth before he went on, but he who did it, did right; if your dike is to hold, something alive has to be put into it!"
f000238,1485.360,1486.120,"Something alive?"
f000239,1486.120,1487.920,"From what catechism have you learned that?"
f000240,1487.920,1492.560,"From none, sir! replied the fellow with a pert laugh: our grandfathers knew that, who, I am sure, were as good Christians as you!"
f000241,1492.560,1498.760,"A child is still better; if you can't get that, a dog will do!"
f000242,1498.760,1502.960,"You keep still with your heathen doctrines, Hauke shouted at him, the hole would be stopped up better if you had been thrown into it!"
f000243,1502.960,1508.920,"Oho! sounded from a dozen throats, and the dikemaster saw grim faces and clenched fists round him; he saw that these were no friends."
f000244,1508.920,1511.440,"The thought of his dike came over him like a sudden fear."
f000245,1511.440,1513.600,"What would happen if now all should throw down their spades?"
f000246,1513.600,1523.120,"As he glanced down he again saw the friend of old Jewe Manners, who walked in and out among the workmen, talked to this one and that one, smiled at one, slapped another on the shoulder with a pleasant airand one after another took up his spade again."
f000247,1523.120,1526.720,"After a few minutes the work was in full swingWhat was it that he still wanted?"
f000248,1526.720,1531.000,"The channel had to be closed and he hid the dog safely in the folds of his cloak."
f000249,1531.000,1539.880,"With a sudden decision, he turned his white horse to the next team: Let down the straw! he called despotically, and the teamster obeyed mechanically."
f000250,1539.880,1545.160,"Soon it rustled down into the depth, and on all sides all arms were stirring again."
f000251,1545.160,1546.400,"This work lasted an hour longer."
f000252,1546.400,1549.840,"It was six o'clock, and deep twilight was descending; the rain had stopped."
f000253,1549.840,1559.200,"Then Hauke called the superintendents together beside his horse: Tomorrow morning at four o'clock, he said, everybody is to be in his place; the moon will still be shining, then we'll finish with God's blessing."
f000254,1559.200,1563.920,"And one thing more, he cried, when they were about to go: do you know this dog?"
f000255,1563.920,1565.040,"And he took the trembling creature out of his cloak."
f000256,1565.040,1566.040,"They did not know it."
f000257,1566.040,1569.320,"Only one man said: He has been begging round the village for days; he belongs to nobody."
f000258,1569.320,1570.640,"Then he is mine! said the dikemaster."
f000259,1570.640,1573.840,"Don't forget: tomorrow morning at four o'clock!"
f000260,1573.840,1574.320,"And he rode away."
f000261,1574.320,1577.000,"When he came home, Ann Grethe stepped out of the door."
f000262,1577.000,1582.360,"She had on neat clothing, and the thought shot through his head that she was going to the conventicle tailor's."
f000263,1582.360,1586.680,"Hold out your apron! he called to her, and as she did so automatically, he threw the little dog, all covered with clay, into the apron."
f000264,1586.680,1589.280,"Carry him in to little Wienke; he is to be her companion!"
f000265,1589.280,1595.520,"But wash and warm him first; then you'll do a good deed, too, that will please God, for the creature is almost frozen!"
f000266,1595.520,1600.000,"And Ann Grethe could not help obeying her master, and therefore did not get to the conventicle that day."
f000267,1600.000,1602.560,"The next day the last cut with the spade was made on the new dike."
f000268,1602.560,1609.840,"The wind had gone down; gulls and other sea birds were flying back and forth over land and water in graceful flight."
f000269,1609.840,1620.480,"From Jevers Island one could hear like a chorus of a thousand voices the cries of the wild geese that still were making themselves at home on the coast of the North Sea, and out of the white morning mists that spread over the wide marshes, gradually rose a golden autumn day and shed its light on the new work of human hands."
f000270,1620.480,1626.480,"After a few weeks the commissioners of the ruler came with the dikemaster general for inspection."
f000271,1626.480,1634.600,"A great banquet, the first since the funeral banquet of old Tede Volkerts, was given in the house of the dikemaster, to which all the dike overseers and the greater landowners were invited."
f000272,1634.600,1637.080,"After dinner all the carriages of the guests and of the dikemaster were made ready."
f000273,1637.080,1646.760,"The dikemaster general helped Elke into the carriage in front of which the brown horse was stamping his hoofs; then he leaped in after her and took the reins himself, for he wanted to drive the clever wife of his dikemaster himself."
f000274,1646.760,1651.240,"Then they rode merrily from the hill down to the road, then up to the new dike, and upon it all round the new enclosed land."
f000275,1651.240,1657.880,"In the mean time a light northwest wind had risen and the tide was driven against the north and west sides of the new dike."
f000276,1657.880,1672.520,"But one could not help being aware of the fact that the gentle slope made the attack of the water gentler; and praise was poured on the new dikemaster from the lips of the ruler's commissioners, so that the objections which now and then were slowly brought out by the overseers, were soon stifled by it."
f000277,1672.520,1673.800,"This, too, passed by."
f000278,1673.800,1679.680,"But the dikemaster received another satisfaction one day as he rode along on the new dike, in quiet, selfconscious meditation."
f000279,1679.680,1697.720,"The question naturally arose in his mind why the new enclosure, which would not have had its being without him, into which he had put the sweat of his brow and his night watches, now finally was named after one of the princesses the new Carolineland."
f000280,1697.720,1702.040,"But it was so: on all the documents concerned with it stood the name, on some even in red Gothic letters."
f000281,1702.040,1708.640,"Then, just as he was looking up, he saw two workmen coming toward him with their tools, the one about twenty paces behind the other."
f000282,1708.640,1711.320,"Why don't you wait! he heard the one behind calling."
f000283,1711.320,1715.480,"The other, who was just standing by a path which led down into the new land, called to him: Another time, Jens."
f000284,1715.480,1715.960,"I'm late; I have to dig clay here."
f000285,1715.960,1716.520,"Where?"
f000286,1716.520,1717.280,"Down here, in the HaukeHaienland."
f000287,1717.280,1721.280,"He called it aloud, as he trotted down the path, as if he wanted the whole marsh below to hear it."
f000288,1721.280,1729.320,"But Hauke felt as if he were hearing his fame proclaimed; he rose from his saddle, spurred on his horse and with steady eyes looked over the wide land that lay to his left."
f000289,1729.320,1730.160,"HaukeHaienland!"
f000290,1730.160,1735.120,"HaukeHaienland! he repeated softly; that sounded as if in all time it could not have another name."
f000291,1735.120,1742.320,"Let them defy him as they wouldthey could not get round his name; the name of the princesswouldn't that soon moulder in old documents?His white horse galloped proudly and in his ears he heard a murmur: HaukeHaienland!"
f000292,1742.320,1742.760,"HaukeHaienland!"
f000293,1742.760,1748.680,"In his thoughts the new dike almost grew into the eighth wonder of the world; in all Frisia there was not the like of it."
f000294,1748.680,1760.080,"And he let the white horse dance, for he felt as if he were standing in the midst of all the Frisians, towering over them by the height of a head, and glancing down upon all keenly and full of pity."
f000295,1760.080,1763.160,"Gradually three years had gone by since the building of the dike."
f000296,1763.160,1764.880,"The new structure had proved its worth, the cost of repairing had been small."
f000297,1764.880,1773.720,"And now almost everywhere in the enclosed land white clover was blooming, and as one walked over the sheltered pastures, the summer wind blew toward one a whole cloud of sweet fragrance."
f000298,1773.720,1781.480,"Thus the time had come to turn the shares, which hitherto had only been ideal, into real ones, and to allot to each shareholder the piece which he was to keep as his own."
f000299,1781.480,1789.920,"Hauke had not been slow to acquire some new shares before this; Ole Peters had kept back out of spite, and owned nothing in the new land."
f000300,1789.920,1794.680,"The distribution of the parts could not be accomplished without annoyance and quarreling; but it was done, nevertheless."
f000301,1794.680,1796.120,"This day, too, lay behind the dikemaster."
f000302,1796.120,1801.160,"From now on he lived in a lonely way for his duties as farmer and as dikemaster and for those who were nearest to him."
f000303,1801.160,1805.800,"His old friends were no longer living, and he was not the man to make new ones."
f000304,1805.800,1810.320,"But under his roof was a peace which even the quiet child did not mar."
f000305,1810.320,1823.720,"She spoke little, the constant questioning that is so characteristic of bright children was rare with her and usually came in such a way that it was hard to answer; but her dear, simple little face almost always wore an expression of content."
f000306,1823.720,1830.240,"She had two playfellows, and they were enough: when she wandered over the hill, the rescued little yellow dog always jumped round her, and when the dog appeared, little Wienke did not stay away long."
f000307,1830.240,1831.280,"The second companion was a pewit gull."
f000308,1831.280,1834.920,"As the dog's name was Pearl so the gull was called Claus."
f000309,1834.920,1838.840,"Claus had been installed on the farm by an aged woman."
f000310,1838.840,1850.000,"Eightyyearold Trin Jans had not been able to keep herself any longer in her hut on the outer dike; and Elke had thought that the aged servant of her grandfather might find peaceful evening hours and a good room to die in at her home."
f000311,1850.000,1857.840,"So, half by force, she and Hauke had brought her to their farm and settled her in the little northwest room in the new barn that the dikemaster had had built beside the main house when he had enlarged his establishment."
f000312,1857.840,1863.000,"A few of the maids had been given rooms next to the old woman's and could help her at night."
f000313,1863.000,1879.280,"Along the walls she kept her old furnishings; a chest made of wood from sugar boxes, above it two coloured pictures of her lost son, then a spinningwheel, now at rest, and a very neat canopied bed in front of which stood an unwieldy stool covered with the white fur of the defunct Angora cat."
f000314,1879.280,1883.880,"But something alive, too, she had had about her and brought with her: that was the gull Claus, which had been attached to her and fed by her for years."
f000315,1883.880,1888.560,"To be sure, when winter came, it flew with the other gulls to the south and did not come again until the wormwood was fragrant on the shore."
f000316,1888.560,1891.920,"The barn was a little lower down on the hill, so the old woman could not look over the dike at the sea from her window."
f000317,1891.920,1901.680,"You keep me here as in prison, dikemaster, she muttered one day, as Hauke stepped in to see her, and she pointed with her bent finger at the fens that spread out below."
f000318,1901.680,1902.840,"Where is Jeverssand?"
f000319,1902.840,1905.720,"Above those red oxen or those black ones?"
f000320,1905.720,1909.160,"What do you want Jeverssand for? asked Hauke."
f000321,1909.160,1911.640,"Jeverssand! muttered the old woman."
f000322,1911.640,1914.280,"Why, I want to see where my boy that time went to God!"
f000323,1914.280,1919.120,"If you want to see that, Hauke replied, you'll have to sit up there under the ash tree."
f000324,1919.120,1923.000,"From there you can look over the whole sea."
f000325,1923.000,1927.160,"Yes, said the old woman; yes, if I had your young legs, dikemaster."
f000326,1927.160,1933.120,"This was the style of thanks the dikemaster and his wife received for some time, until all at once everything was different."
f000327,1933.120,1936.200,"The little child's head of Wienke one morning peeped in through her halfopen door."
f000328,1936.200,1940.560,"Well, called the old woman, who sat with her hands folded on her wooden stool; what have you to tell me?"
f000329,1940.560,1945.920,"But the child silently came nearer and looked at her constantly with its listless eyes."
f000330,1945.920,1947.200,"Are you the dikemaster's child?"
f000331,1947.200,1952.200,"Trin Jans asked, and as the child lowered its head as if nodding, she went on: Then sit down here on my stool."
f000332,1952.200,1953.800,"Once it was an Angora catso big!"
f000333,1953.800,1954.600,"But your father killed it."
f000334,1954.600,1957.640,"If it were still alive, you could ride on it."
f000335,1957.640,1970.360,"Wienke silently turned her eyes to the white fur; then she knelt down and began to stroke it with her little hands as children are wont to do with live cats or dogs."
f000336,1970.360,1973.880,"Poor cat! she said then and went on with her caresses."
f000337,1973.880,1982.720,"Well, cried the old woman after a while, now that's enough; and you can sit on him today, too."
f000338,1982.720,1985.520,"Perhaps your father only killed him for that."
f000339,1985.520,1991.880,"Then she lifted up the child by both arms and set it down roughly on the stool."
f000340,1991.880,1999.080,"But when it remained sitting there, silent and motionless and only kept looking at her, she began to shake her head."
f000341,1999.080,2001.960,"Thou art punishing him, Lord God!"
f000342,2001.960,2006.280,"Yes, yes, Thou art punishing him! she murmured."
f000343,2006.280,2015.600,"But pity for the child seemed to come over her; she stroked its scanty hair with her bony hand, and the eyes of the little girl seemed to show that this did her good."
f000344,2015.600,2017.760,"From now on Wienke came every day to the old woman in her room."
f000345,2017.760,2030.800,"Soon she sat down on the Angora stool of her own accord, and Trin Jans put small bits of meat and bread which she always saved into the child's little hands, and made her throw them on the floor."
f000346,2030.800,2034.480,"Then the gull shot out of some corner with screams and wings spread out and pounced on the morsels."
f000347,2034.480,2051.960,"At first the great, rushing bird frightened the child and made her cry out; but soon it all happened like a game learned by heart, and her little head only had to appear in the opening of the door, when the bird rushed up to her and perched on her head and shoulders, until the old woman helped and the feeding could begin."
f000348,2051.960,2058.720,"Trin Jans who before never could bear to have anyone merely stretch out a hand after her Claus, now patiently watched the child gradually win over the bird altogether."
f000349,2058.720,2063.440,"It willingly let itself be chased, and she carried it about in her apron."
f000350,2063.440,2080.880,"Then, when on the hill the little yellow dog would jump round her and up at the bird in jealousy, she would cry: Don't, don't, Pearl! and lift the gull with her little arms so high, that the bird, after setting itself free, would fly screaming over the hill, and now the dog, by jumping and caressing, would try to win its place in her arms."
f000351,2080.880,2090.320,"When by chance Hauke's or Elke's eyes fell upon this strange fourleaved clover which, as it were, was held to the same stem only by the same defectthen they cast tender glances upon the child."
f000352,2090.320,2100.880,"But when they turned away, there remained on their faces only the pain that each carried away alone, for the saving word had not yet been spoken between them."
f000353,2100.880,2111.840,"One summer morning, when Wienke sat with the old woman and the two animals on the big stones in front of the barn door, both her parents passed bythe dikemaster leading his white horse, with the reins flung over his arm."
f000354,2111.840,2119.840,"He wanted to ride on the dike and had got his horse out of the fens himself; on the hill his wife had taken his arm."
f000355,2119.840,2127.360,"The sun shone down warmly; it was almost sultry, and now and then a gust of wind blew from the southsoutheast."
f000356,2127.360,2129.640,"It seemed that her seat was uncomfortable for the child."
f000357,2129.640,2134.160,"Wienke wants to go too! she cried, shook the gull out of her lap and seized her father's hand."
f000358,2134.160,2136.400,"Then come! said he."
f000359,2136.400,2137.600,"But Elke cried: In this wind?"
f000360,2137.600,2138.200,"She'll fly away from you!"
f000361,2138.200,2144.480,"I'll hold her all right; and today we have warm air and jolly water; then she can see it dance!"
f000362,2144.480,2147.920,"Then Elke ran into the house and got a shawl and a little cap for her child."
f000363,2147.920,2151.680,"But a storm is brewing, she said; hurry and get on your way and be back soon."
f000364,2151.680,2154.640,"Hauke laughed: That shan't get us! and lifted the child to his saddle."
f000365,2154.640,2160.320,"Elke stayed a while on the hill and, shading her eyes with her hand, watched the two trot down the road and toward the dike."
f000366,2160.320,2164.640,"Trin Jan sat on the stone and murmured incomprehensible things with her lips."
f000367,2164.640,2166.960,"The child lay motionless in her father's arms."
f000368,2166.960,2172.120,"It seemed as if it breathed with difficulty under the pressure of the sultry air."
f000369,2172.120,2174.480,"He bent down his head to her: Well, Wienke? he asked."
f000370,2174.480,2178.600,"The child looked at him a while: Father, she said, you can do that."
f000371,2178.600,2180.000,"Can't you do everything?"
f000372,2180.000,2182.480,"What is it that I can do, Wienke?"
f000373,2182.480,2185.920,"But she was silent; she seemed not to have understood her own question."
f000374,2185.920,2189.040,"It was high tide."
f000375,2189.040,2198.280,"When they came to the dike, the reflection of the sun on the wide water flashed into her eyes, a whirlwind made the waves eddy and raised them high up, ever new waves came and beat splashing against the beach."
f000376,2198.280,2203.960,"Then, in her fear, her little hands clung round her father's fist which was holding the reins, so that the horse made a bound to the side."
f000377,2203.960,2207.880,"The paleblue eyes looked up at Hauke in confused fright: The water, father!"
f000378,2207.880,2209.520,"The water! she cried."
f000379,2209.520,2217.720,"But he gently freed his hand and said: Be calm, child; you are with your father; the water won't hurt you!"
f000380,2217.720,2222.120,"She pushed her pale blond hair from her forehead and again dared to look upon the sea."
f000381,2222.120,2230.880,"It won't hurt me, she said trembling; no, tell it not to hurt us; you can do that, and then it won't do anything to us!"
f000382,2230.880,2242.880,"I can't do that, child, replied Hauke seriously; but the dike on which we are riding shelters us, and this your father has thought out and has had built."
f000383,2242.880,2247.960,"Her eyes turned upon him as if she did not quite understand that; then she buried her strikingly small head in the wide folds of her father's coat."
f000384,2247.960,2252.080,"Why are you hiding, Wienke? he whispered to her; are you afraid?"
f000385,2252.080,2259.280,"And a trembling little voice rose out of the folds of the coat: Wienke would rather not look; but you can do everything, can't you, father?"
f000386,2259.280,2260.880,"Distant thunder was rolling against the wind."
f000387,2260.880,2263.080,"Hoho! cried Hauke, there it comes!"
f000388,2263.080,2266.280,"And he turned his horse round to ride back."
f000389,2266.280,2268.360,"Now we want to go home to mother!"
f000390,2268.360,2275.320,"The child drew a deep breath; but not until they had reached the hill and the house did she raise her little head from her father's breast."
f000391,2275.320,2281.200,"When Elke had taken off the little shawl and cap in the room, the child remained standing before her mother like a dumb little ninepin."
f000392,2281.200,2284.280,"Well, Wienke, she said, and shook her gently, do you like the big water?"
f000393,2284.280,2286.920,"But the child opened her eyes wide."
f000394,2286.920,2287.920,"It talks, she said."
f000395,2287.920,2288.920,"Wienke is afraid!"
f000396,2288.920,2291.520,"It doesn't talk; it only murmurs and roars!"
f000397,2291.520,2296.320,"The child looked into the void: Has it got legs? she asked again; can it come over the dike?"
f000398,2296.320,2299.640,"No, Wienke; your father looks out for that, he is the dikemaster."
f000399,2299.640,2303.000,"Yes, said the child and clapped her little hands together with an idiotic smile."
f000400,2303.000,2304.320,"Father can do everythingeverything!"
f000401,2304.320,2307.880,"Then suddenly, turning away from her mother, she cried: Let Wienke go to Trin Jans, she has red apples!"
f000402,2307.880,2308.840,"And Elke opened the door and let the child out."
f000403,2308.840,2317.200,"When she had closed it again, she glanced at her husband with the deepest anguish in her eyes from which hitherto he had drawn only comfort and courage that had helped him."
f000404,2317.200,2328.000,"He gave her his hand and pressed hers, as if there were no further need for words between them; then she said in a low voice: No, Hauke, let me speak: the child that I have borne you after years will stay a child always."
f000405,2328.000,2329.040,"Oh, good God!"
f000406,2329.040,2331.080,"It is feebleminded!"
f000407,2331.080,2332.680,"I have to say it once in your hearing."
f000408,2332.680,2337.960,"I knew it long ago, said Hauke and held tightly his wife's hand which she wanted to draw away."
f000409,2337.960,2339.120,"So we are left alone after all, she said again."
f000410,2339.120,2346.720,"But Hauke shook his head: I love her, and she throws her little arms round me and presses close to my breast; for all the treasures of the world I wouldn't miss that!"
f000411,2346.720,2352.200,"The woman stared ahead darkly: But why? she asked; what have I, poor mother, done?"
f000412,2352.200,2362.240,"Yes, Elke, that I have asked, too, of Him who alone can know; but you know, too, that the Almighty gives men no answerperhaps because we would not grasp it."
f000413,2362.240,2364.520,"He had seized his wife's other hand too, and gently drew her toward him."
f000414,2364.520,2368.960,"Don't let yourself be kept from loving your child as you do; be sure it understands that."
f000415,2368.960,2373.760,"Then Elke threw herself on her husband's breast and cried to her heart's content and was no longer alone with her grief."
f000416,2373.760,2385.120,"Then suddenly she smiled at him; after pressing his hand passionately, she ran out and got her child from old Trin Jans' room, took it on her lap and caressed and kissed it, until it stammered: Mother, my dear mother!"
f000417,2385.120,2391.200,"Thus the people on the dikemaster's farm lived quietly; if the child had not been there, it would have been greatly missed."
f000418,2391.200,2401.920,"Gradually the summer passed by; the migrating birds had flown away, the song of larks was no longer in the air; only in front of the barns, where they pecked at the grain in thrashing time, one could hear some of them scream as they flew away."
f000419,2401.920,2403.040,"Already everything was frozen hard."
f000420,2403.040,2408.680,"In the kitchen of the main house Trin Jans sat one afternoon on the wooden steps of a stairway that started beside the stove and led to the attic."
f000421,2408.680,2411.000,"In the last weeks it seemed as if a new life had entered into her."
f000422,2411.000,2420.520,"Now she liked to go into the kitchen occasionally and watch Elke at work; there was no longer any idea of her legs not being able to carry her so far, since one day little Wienke had pulled her up here by her apron."
f000423,2420.520,2428.640,"Now the child was kneeling beside her, looking with her quiet eyes into the flames that were blazing up out of the stovehole; one of her little hands was clinging to the old woman's sleeve, the other was in her own pale blonde hair."
f000424,2428.640,2434.880,"Trin Jans was telling a story: You know, she said, I was in the service at your greatgrandfather's, as housemaid, and there I had to feed the pigs."
f000425,2434.880,2444.720,"He was cleverer than all the restthen it happenedit was awfully long agobut, one night, by moonlight, they had the lock to the sea closed, and she couldn't go back into the sea."
f000426,2444.720,2451.080,"Oh, how she screamed and clutched her hard, bristly hair with her fishhands!"
f000427,2451.080,2453.320,"Yes, child, I saw her and heard her scream."
f000428,2453.320,2466.040,"The ditches between the fens were all full of water, and the moon beamed on them so that they shone like silver; and she swam from one ditch into another and raised her arms and clapped what hands she had together, so that one could hear the splash from far, as if she wanted to pray."
f000429,2466.040,2468.880,"But, child, those creatures can't pray."
f000430,2468.880,2478.080,"I sat in front of the house door on a few beams that had been driven there to build with, and looked far over the fens; and the mermaid was still swimming in the ditches, and when she raised her arms, they were glittering with silver and diamonds."
f000431,2478.080,2482.880,"At last I saw her no longer, and the wild geese and gulls that I had not been hearing all the time were again flying through the air with whistling and cackling."
f000432,2482.880,2483.720,"The old woman stopped."
f000433,2483.720,2488.520,"The child had caught one word: Couldn't pray? she asked."
f000434,2488.520,2489.000,"What are you saying?"
f000435,2489.000,2489.800,"Who was that?"
f000436,2489.800,2494.800,"Child, said the old woman; it was the mermaid; they are monsters and can't be saved."
f000437,2494.800,2500.000,"Can't be saved! repeated the child, and a deep sigh made her little breast heave, as if she had understood that."
f000438,2500.000,2503.840,"Trin Jans! a deep voice sounded from the kitchen door, and the old woman was a little startled."
f000439,2503.840,2509.200,"It was the dikemaster Hauke Haien, who leaned there by the post; what are you telling the child?"
f000440,2509.200,2514.440,"Haven't I told you to keep your fairytales for yourself or else to tell them to the geese and hens?"
f000441,2514.440,2517.880,"The old woman looked at him with an angry glance and pushed the little girl away."
f000442,2517.880,2524.200,"That's no fairytale, she murmured, my greatuncle told it to me!"
f000443,2524.200,2525.080,"Your greatuncle, Trin?"
f000444,2525.080,2526.800,"You just said you had seen it yourself."
f000445,2526.800,2531.640,"That doesn't matter, said the old woman; but you don't believe me, Hauke Haien; you want to make my greatuncle a liar!"
f000446,2531.640,2536.280,"Then she moved nearer to the stove and stretched her hands out over the flames of the stovehole."
f000447,2536.280,2540.760,"The dikemaster cast a glance at the window: twilight had scarcely begun."
f000448,2540.760,2548.760,"Come, Wienke! he said and drew his feebleminded child toward him; come with me, I want to show you something outside, from the dike."
f000449,2548.760,2551.040,"But we have to walk; the white horse is at the blacksmith's."
f000450,2551.040,2562.440,"Then he took her into the room and Elke wrapped thick woolen shawls round the child's neck and shoulders; and soon her father walked with her on the old dike toward the northwest, past Jeverssand, where the flats stretched out broad and almost endless."
f000451,2562.440,2567.800,"Now he would carry her, now she would walk holding his hand; the twilight thickened; in the distance everything vanished in mist and vapour."
f000452,2567.800,2580.280,"But in parts still in sight, the invisibly swelling streams that washed the flats had broken the ice and, as Hauke Haien had once seen it in his youth, steaming mists rose out of the cracks as at that time, and there again the uncanny foolish figures were hopping toward one another, bowed and suddenly stretched out into horrible breadths."
f000453,2580.280,2583.440,"The child clung frightened to her father and covered her face with his hand."
f000454,2583.440,2586.000,"The sea devils! she whispered, trembling, through his fingers; the sea devils!"
f000455,2586.000,2590.720,"He shook his head: No, Wienke, they are neither mermaids nor sea devils; there are no such things; who told you about them?"
f000456,2590.720,2593.200,"She looked up to him with a dull glance; but she did not reply."
f000457,2593.200,2596.400,"Tenderly he stroked her cheeks: Look there again! he said, they are only poor hungry birds!"
f000458,2596.400,2600.960,"Look now, how that big one spreads its wings; they are getting the fish that go into those steaming cracks!"
f000459,2600.960,2602.560,"Fish! repeated Wienke."
f000460,2602.560,2605.040,"Yes, child, they are all alive, just as we are; there is nothing else; but God is everywhere!"
f000461,2605.040,2609.320,"Little Wienke had fixed her eyes on the ground and held her breath; she looked frightened as if she were gazing into an abyss."
f000462,2609.320,2617.840,"Perhaps it only seemed so; her father looked at her a long while, he bent down and looked at her little face, but on it was written no emotion of her inscrutable soul."
f000463,2617.840,2621.680,"He lifted her on his arm and put her icy little hands into one of his thick woollen mittens."
f000464,2621.680,2626.800,"There, my Wienkethe child could not have been aware of the note of passionate tenderness in his wordsthere, warm yourself, near me!"
f000465,2626.800,2627.920,"You are our child, our only one."
f000466,2627.920,2633.520,"You love us The man's voice broke; but the little girl pressed her small head tenderly against his rough beard."
f000467,2633.520,2635.120,"And so they went home in peace."
f000468,2635.120,2636.400,"After New Year care had once more entered the house."
f000469,2636.400,2644.480,"A fever of the marshes had seized the dikemaster; he too had hovered near the edge of the grave, and when he had revived under Elke's nursing and care, he scarcely seemed the same man."
f000470,2644.480,2649.640,"The fatigue of his body also lay upon his spirit, and Elke noticed with some worry that he was always easily satisfied."
f000471,2649.640,2656.320,"Nevertheless, toward the end of March, he had a desire to mount his white horse and for the first time to ride along his dike again."
f000472,2656.320,2660.600,"This was one afternoon when the sun that had shone before, was shrouded for a long while by dim mist."
f000473,2660.600,2665.040,"In the winter there had been a few floods; but they had not been serious."
f000474,2665.040,2675.240,"Only over by the other shore a flock of sheep had been drowned on an island and a piece of the foreland torn away; here on this side and on the new land no damage worth mentioning had been done."
f000475,2675.240,2680.520,"But in the last night a stronger storm had raged; now the dikemaster had to go out and inspect everything with his own eyes."
f000476,2680.520,2685.000,"He had ridden along on the new dike from the southeastern corner and everything was well preserved."
f000477,2685.000,2689.480,"But when he reached the northeastern corner, at the point where the new dike meets the old one, the new one, to be sure, was unharmed."
f000478,2689.480,2700.960,"But where formerly the channel had reached the old dike and flowed along it, he saw a great, broad piece of the grassy scar destroyed and washed away and a hollow in the body of the dike worn by the flood, in which, moreover, a network of paths made by mice was exposed."
f000479,2700.960,2706.480,"Hauke dismounted and inspected the damage close by: there was no doubt that the mischief done by the mice extended on invisible."
f000480,2706.480,2707.400,"He was startled violently."
f000481,2707.400,2713.200,"All this should have been considered when the new dike was being built; as it had been overlooked then, something had to be done now."
f000482,2713.200,2720.440,"The cattle were not yet grazing in the fens, the growth of the grass was unusually backward; wherever he looked there was barrenness and void."
f000483,2720.440,2727.680,"He mounted his horse again and rode up and down the shore; it was low tide, and he was well aware of how the current had again dug itself a new bed in the clay and had now hit upon the old dike."
f000484,2727.680,2731.560,"The new dike, however, when it was hit, had been able to withstand the attack on account of its gentler slope."
f000485,2731.560,2735.520,"A heap of new toil and care rose before the mind's eye of the dikemaster."
f000486,2735.520,2746.440,"Not only did the old dike have to be reenforced, its profile, too, had to be made more like that of the new one; above all, the channel, which again had proved dangerous, had to be turned aside by new dams or walls."
f000487,2746.440,2754.360,"Once more he rode on the new dike up to the farthest northwestern corner, then back again, keeping his eyes continually on the newly worn bed of the channel which was marked off clearly on the exposed clay beside him."
f000488,2754.360,2764.880,"The white horse pushed forward, snorted and pawed with its front hoofs; but the rider held him back, for he wanted to ride slowly, and to curb the inner unrest that was seething within him more and more wildly."
f000489,2764.880,2771.800,"If a storm flood should come againa flood like the one in, when property and unnumbered human beings were swallowed upif it should come again, as it had come several times before!"
f000490,2771.800,2776.000,"A violent shudder came over the riderthe old dike would not hold out against the sudden attack."
f000491,2776.000,2776.760,"What thenwhat would happen then?"
f000492,2776.760,2781.480,"There would be only one, one single way of possibly saving the old enclosed land with the property and life in it."
f000493,2781.480,2783.720,"Hauke felt his heart stand still, his usually so steady head grew dizzy."
f000494,2783.720,2791.080,"He did not utter it, but something spoke within him strongly enough: your land, the HaukeHaienland, would have to be sacrificed and the new dike pierced."
f000495,2791.080,2794.760,"In his mind's eye he saw the rushing tide break in and cover grass and clover with its salty, foaming spray."
f000496,2794.760,2798.120,"His spur pricked the flanks of his white horse, which, with a sudden scream, flew along the dike and down the road that led to the hill of the dikemaster."
f000497,2798.120,2801.040,"He came home with his head full of inner fright and disorderly plans."
f000498,2801.040,2806.320,"He threw himself into his armchair, and when Elke came into the room with their daughter, he rose again, lifted up the child and kissed it."
f000499,2806.320,2807.320,"Then he chased away the little yellow dog with a few light slaps."
f000500,2807.320,2810.520,"I have to go up to the inn again, he said, and took his cap from the hook by the door, where he had only just put it."
f000501,2810.520,2813.240,"His wife looked at him anxiously."
f000502,2813.240,2815.400,"What do you want to do there?"
f000503,2815.400,2817.080,"It is near evening, Hauke."
f000504,2817.080,2820.440,"Dike matters! he muttered."
f000505,2820.440,2822.720,"I'll meet some of the overseers there."
f000506,2822.720,2828.480,"She followed him and pressed his hand, for with these words he had already left the door."
f000507,2828.480,2838.680,"Hauke Haien, who hitherto had made all decisions by himself, now was eager for a word from those whom he had not considered worthy of taking an interest before."
f000508,2838.680,2846.960,"In the room of the tavern he found Ole Peters with two of the overseers and an inhabitant of the district at the card table."
f000509,2846.960,2856.000,"I suppose you come from out there, dikemaster? said Ole, who took up the already half distributed cards and threw them down again."
f000510,2856.000,2861.040,"Yes, Ole, Hauke replied; I was there; it looks bad."
f000511,2861.040,2862.600,"Bad?"
f000512,2862.600,2866.520,"Well, it'll cost a few hundred pieces of sod and a straw covering."
f000513,2866.520,2868.600,"I was there too this afternoon."
f000514,2868.600,2879.920,"It won't be done so cheaply, Ole, replied the dikemaster; the channel is there again, and even if it doesn't hit the old dike from the north, it hits it from the northwest."
f000515,2879.920,2884.360,"You should have left it where you found it, said Ole drily."
f000516,2884.360,2891.320,"That means, returned Hauke, the new land's none of your business; and therefore it should not exist."
f000517,2891.320,2893.120,"That is your own fault."
f000518,2893.120,2900.400,"But if we have to make walls to protect the old dike, the green clover behind the new one will bring us a profit above the cost."
f000519,2900.400,2905.960,"What are you saying, dikemaster? cried the overseers; Walls?"
f000520,2905.960,2906.960,"How many?"
f000521,2906.960,2909.760,"You like to have the most expensive of everything."
f000522,2909.760,2913.440,"The cards lay untouched upon the table."
f000523,2913.440,2923.440,"I'll tell you, dikemaster, said Ole Peters, and leaned on both elbows, your new land that you presented to us is a devouring thing."
f000524,2923.440,2932.440,"Everybody is still laboring under the heavy cost of your broad dike; and now that is devouring our old dike too we are expected to renew it."
f000525,2932.440,2938.400,"Fortunately it isn't so bad; the dike has held out so far and will continue to hold out."
f000526,2938.400,2941.600,"Mount your white horse tomorrow and look at it again!"
f000527,2941.600,2959.280,"Hauke had come here from the peace of his own house; behind these words he had just heard, moderate though they were, there layand he could not but be aware of ittough resistance; he felt, too, as if he were lacking his old strength to cope with it."
f000528,2959.280,2966.880,"I will do as you advise, Ole, he said; only I fear I shall find it as I have seen it today."
f000529,2966.880,2971.240,"A restless night followed this day."
f000530,2971.240,2974.400,"Hauke tossed sleepless upon his pillows."
f000531,2974.400,2984.480,"What is the matter? asked Elke who was kept awake by worry over her husband; if something depresses you, speak it out; that's the way we've always done."
f000532,2984.480,2994.600,"It's of no consequence, Elke, he replied, there is something to repair on the dike at the locks; you know that I always have to work over these things at night."
f000533,2994.600,3007.560,"That was all he said; he wanted to keep freedom of action; unconsciously the clear insight and strong intelligence of his wife was a hindrance to him which he instinctively avoided in his present weakness."